糖心Vlog

Interview - One man, two guvnors and a single vision

Paul Jump talks to Andrew Coats, go-to director for a game-changing approach to collaboration

Published on
December 13, 2012
Last updated
May 26, 2015

Source: University of Warwick

Smoothing the path: Coats intends to 鈥榣ook at every aspect of the university to see if it can be better done jointly鈥



When Andrew Coats was recruited earlier this year as the inaugural director of the University of Warwick鈥檚 much-trumpeted alliance with Australia鈥檚 Monash University, he was cheerfully informed by the latter鈥檚 chancellor, Alan Finkel, that anything less than 鈥渃hanging the game鈥 on university collaboration would be deemed a failure.

Professor Coats does not disagree with this view. For him, the Anglo-Australian alliance must be more 鈥渄eep and meaningful鈥 than the glut of existing inter-university collaborations that result in little more than the exchange of a few students and occasional mutual visits by senior managers.

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 do it if it weren鈥檛 something really dramatic,鈥 Professor Coats told 糖心Vlog after a high-level launch event for the alliance, held at the Australian High Commission in London at the end of October.

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There, Nigel Thrift, Warwick鈥檚 vice-chancellor, explained that the alliance鈥檚 鈥済enuinely unique鈥 scope and ambition were underpinned by the conviction that universities would be unable to fulfil their increasingly 鈥渃omplex array of duties鈥 if they continued restricting their business 鈥渢o the confines of the nation state, with its necessarily limited resources and horizons鈥. Rather than overseas campuses, he saw partnerships between established institutions as the best way to break out of those restrictions.

Professor Thrift said that during the three years of an existing 鈥渃ore strategic partnership鈥, Warwick and Monash had discovered 鈥渟hared ambitions, common levels of quality and surprisingly similar institutional cultures鈥. Ed Byrne, Monash鈥檚 vice-chancellor, agreed, describing both institutions as 鈥渉ungry and never happy with where they were鈥. Noting that universities could not expect immunity from globalisation, he said the appointment of Professor Coats was the first time that two universities from different continents had made such a senior joint appointment.

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Dynamic duo

Professor Coats, an Australian cardiologist and currently chief executive of Norwich Research Park, will formally take up the role of alliance director and joint academic vice-president of Monash and Warwick in February.

However, he is already actively engaged with his remit, which involves 鈥渓ooking at every aspect of the university to see if it can be better done jointly鈥 and then smoothing the bureaucratic way to making joint solutions possible.

He said the two universities - which he described as 鈥渟lightly aggressive teenagers who wonder why the adults get everything鈥 - hope to achieve a 鈥渉uge鈥 increase in research income and reputation by delivering outcomes together that they could not do alone.

This will be achieved partly through bursaries for joint PhDs and the joint appointment of up to 50 research 鈥渟tars鈥.

Professor Coats said the quality of applicants for the first six joint positions - all in chemistry - confirmed expectations that the lure of running labs in both universities and accessing two national funding systems and pools of doctoral students would attract researchers who 鈥渋n all honesty probably wouldn鈥檛 have answered an advert to either Warwick or Monash alone鈥.

He said the applicants, who will be in post from April, would be assessed on their ability to manage a lab from afar, but insisted that doing so was 鈥渘ot rocket science鈥 - 鈥渕ultinational companies have done it for many years鈥.

Nor did he regard the distance between the UK and Australia as a bar to joint investments in research infrastructure, pointing out that researchers were used to arranging access to distantly located national or international facilities - often via email-based collaborations.

Accessing equipment on the other side of the world is no different, he said. 鈥淚n some ways it is easier: you do your work and鈥our colleague picks it up overnight in his time zone and finishes it off.鈥

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But all involved in the alliance agree that research is, in Professor Byrne鈥檚 phrase, the 鈥渆asy bit鈥: joint teaching and learning will be harder.

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Professor Coats said it was 鈥渙bvious鈥 what could be achieved, but agreed that, historically, teaching has been 鈥渇ar more local than transnational鈥, with bureaucracy such as course approvals and credit points set up as 鈥渓ocal industries鈥.

The alliance plans to establish 鈥渃ompletely different鈥 courses involving face-to-face and online tuition. These will begin with jointly taught master鈥檚 degrees in subjects where the universities have existing research links and where their locations can be capitalised on (for example, archaeology).

鈥淚t is just the 鈥榣ow hanging fruit鈥 initially, but then [we need to identify] what the big global challenges are that this alliance can help solve,鈥 Professor Coats explained.

The universities are also looking at tapping into new international student markets by establishing undergraduate degrees combining science and the humanities. These would be taught at both campuses so that students could spend as much time as they liked in each (or at one of Monash鈥檚 several overseas campuses), thus preparing for 鈥済lobal careers鈥.

The aim, Professor Coats said, was for the two universities to 鈥渙perate in a seamless way so that students coming from overseas have the impression they are joining a single university with two campuses鈥. He said that the improved student experience that would arise from a more international student body would be further enhanced by initiatives such as combined sporting and debating competitions.

Expanding network

He admitted the alliance鈥檚 grand global ambitions were likely to be best served by expanding and establishing 鈥渁 workable network鈥 with additional institutions that 鈥渉as a footprint over all the major world areas鈥.

For this reason, it was likely that the alliance could grow to include member institutions from North America and China - plus, possibly, Latin America and the Indian subcontinent. But any network with more than six members would be unlikely to achieve the level of integration that the alliance aspires to reach, Professor Coats added.

He admitted that the danger of such mutual absorption was that alliance members might ignore potentially fruitful collaborations with other institutions. But he insisted the alliance was not meant to be exclusive, and suggested that the bigger risk was that the rank-and-file at the two founding universities might end up perceiving it as a mere distraction: 鈥渢he pet hobby鈥 of the two vice-chancellors. To prevent this, he said, it would be crucial to consult staff and listen to their problems in order to 鈥渕ake the opportunities more visible鈥.

Another major risk was that the alliance might miss its targets for boosting research and teaching income, thus threatening its financial sustainability. For this reason, he would make sure that every joint initiative had 鈥渁 very detailed, carefully thought through business plan鈥.

But the cultural similarities between Warwick and Monash gave Professor Coats every confidence that the alliance would herald a new era of globalised higher education.

鈥淭here will be a lot of interest in what the alliance achieves. We expect to be copied in the future and this will be of great benefit in terms of [our reputation as] innovative universities,鈥 he said.

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paul.jump@tsleducation.com.

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